Immunotherapy the new tool in cancer fight

More than a third of patients with advanced melanoma who were treated with immunotherapy were showing no signs of cancer seven years later (Source: xrender/iStockphoto)

Immunotherapy has made great strides against cancers like melanoma that were once believed incurable, though scientists still do not understand why it works well in some cases but not others.

The technique, hailed as Science’s breakthrough of 2013, involves training the immune system to attack tumours.

In some cases, the approach disarms the tumour’s defenses, in other cases it selects a patient’s toughest immune cells, growing them in a lab and reinjecting them to bolster the body’s assault on cancer.

“The beauty of this approach is that it is more selective … and is producing durable and long-lasting remissions,” says Steven O’Day, associate professor of medicine at the University of Southern California Keck school of Medicine.

According to research published late last year, 40 per cent of patients with advanced melanoma who were treated with immunotherapy were showing no signs of cancer seven years later.

The results of three clinical trials released this week at the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago may bolster this number.

One of them, an early phase one study of patients with inoperable melanoma, led to an unprecedented median survival of three and a half years in a cancer that usually kills within about one year.

“This is truly revolutionary and now the treatments are getting so good in melanoma that we are seeing for the first time significant progress in very difficult to treat solid tumours,” says O’Day.

Solid tumours are found in most cancers, including cervical cancer, which is the latest breakthrough in immunotherapy.

Researchers from the National Institutes of Health reported that a new technique to lift immune cells from a tumour and then grow billions of them in the lab for reinfusion into the patient succeeded in two of nine patients.

The women, both in their late 30s, were given less than a year to live before they entered the trial, and had cancer throughout their bodies. They now show no signs of cancer — one for 22 months and the other more than a year after treatment.

But why it did not work in the other eight subjects remains a mystery that scientists are working hard to solve.

Targeting oral and anal cancers

In the meantime, more studies are being launched on immunotherapy as a treatment for oral and anal cancers that, like cervical cancer, are caused by the human papillomavirus (HPV).

When it comes to melanoma, as well as kidney and lung cancer, a new kind of drug that blocks a protein called PD-1 has energised the field of research.

“PD-1 is arguably the most exciting breakthrough in cancer therapy in a decade,” says Mark Schoenebaum, an analyst with ISI Group.

Pharmaceutical giants are among those racing to make drugs that will help the immune system recognise and attack cancer.

Experts say the field of immunotherapy has a market potential of US$35 billion dollars (AU$38 billion).

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We are Dietitians and Nutritionists, Speech Pathologists and Skincare Specialists. We see adults and children from our office in Randwick. Passionate about health and wellbeing, we write about issues relevant to our clinical practice.